Not exact matches
Though he often works on canvas, he frequently
incorporates nontraditional materials such as strips
of wood, bricks, wire, electric cords, socks, buttons, paper
scraps, and even caviar to create his trademark puns and paradoxes.
His work employs a bricolage technique,
incorporating a range
of brightly - colored materials including
wood, tin
scraps, metal and thousands
of tiny brads, or thin nails.
Known by the tag name «Twist» for his graffiti and street art, McGee has also developed a career within museums and galleries, exhibiting drawings, paintings, prints, and large - scale, mixed - media installations that take inspiration from urban culture,
incorporating elements such as empty liquor bottles, cans
of spray paint, signs,
scrap wood or metal, surfboards, and other found materials.
The same can be said
of American artist Louise Nevelson, whose large, wooden sculptures, such as her 1979 Untitled,
incorporate discarded
scraps of wood, which were given to her by friends and others, or which she collected on the street herself.